West

Alaska

With long, harsh winters and the presence of a large, well-developed oil and gas industry, Alaska ranks first in the country for both per capita energy consumption and expenditures. The state has decreased emissions 34% from 1990-2021, with emissions slowly declining from non-coal fossil fuel generation. The state has no sales or personal income tax, as oil and gas industry revenue funds most of the state government. Climate progress has primarily been led by local and tribal action.
Governor
Mike Dunleavy (Republican)
House Party
Republican Majority
Senate Party
Republican Majority
Legislative session
1/21/25 - 5/21/25

3

Policies Enacted or In Progress
across 3 policy areas

59

Policy Opportunities
across 7 policy areas

West

11 states
This map shows the occurrence of climate policies passed at the state-level. Higher numbers represent more climate policies enacted.

Progress by Policy Area

  • Enacted Enacted policies have been passed or established in a state by a governing body via legislation, executive orders, rules, regulations, and/or other program creation, and remain in effect.
  • In-progress In progress policies have been established in a state, but final regulations, rules, or plans are pending final approval. This also includes legislation and executive orders that require regulations to be put into effect.
  • Partially Enacted Partially enacted policies have been enacted in the state, but are missing one or more policy components. Dashboard policies cannot be considered partially enacted unless policy components are available.
  • Not Enacted Not enacted policies have not been passed or established in the state or are no longer in effect.
Glossary of Terms
The colored bars indicate the status for each policy on the Dashboard, viewed across seven policy areas.
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Climate Policies in Alaska

Filters
Status Policy Policy Area Policy Category Year Enacted
Not Enacted
Empty column

Alaska does not have a statewide energy code, but the Alaska Housing Building Energy Efficiency Standard (BEES) applies to construction where state financial assistance is used for a loan. BEES is currently comprised of the 2018 IECC, ASHRAE 62.2 2016, and Alaska Specific Amendments to both.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Codes
Not Enacted
Empty column

Commercial energy codes are statewide building codes that dictate the energy performance requirements of newly constructed commercial buildings.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Codes
Not Enacted
Empty column

Stretch building energy codes are an optional, more stringent building code established by the state that local jurisdictions can adopt to require that newly constructed buildings are more efficient than the baseline state codes.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Codes
Not Enacted
Empty column

Appliance standards set minimum energy and water conservation requirements for appliances and equipment.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Standards
Not Enacted
Empty column

Building performance standards establish energy and/or greenhouse gas performance targets for existing buildings in a state. These targets increase in stringency over time, leading to efficiency improvements in buildings to conserve energy and reduce emissions.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Standards
Not Enacted
Empty column

Clean heat standards establish a performance standard requiring heat providers to deliver a gradually-increasing percentage of low-emission heating services to customers.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Standards
Not Enacted
Empty column

Energy efficiency resource standards (EERS) establish targets and deadlines for utilities to reduce electricity demand through efficiency or "demand side" programs.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Efficiency
Enacted
Empty column

Alaska has enacted commercial PACE-enabling legislation and has active programs.

Establishing Policies
Buildings and Efficiency
Building Efficiency 2022
Partially Enacted
Empty column

The State Policy Opportunity Tracker (SPOT) breaks clean energy policies down into “components”, which are binary questions to evaluate policy quality. Higher quality policies have more of their SPOT components fulfilled.

Policy Components
enacted
enacted
enacted
not-enacted
3/4
Buildings and Efficiency
Building Efficiency
Not Enacted
Empty column

All-electric buildings policies require new buildings to be constructed with all-electric heating, cooling, and cooking systems to transition away from fossil-fuel use in buildings.

Buildings and Efficiency
Building Electrification

The State Climate Policy Dashboard tracks only passed policies and does not include bills currently proposed in legislative sessions. The website is intended to illustrate the current status of policies for each state, as well as key resources and model states for each policy.

Much of the information contained in this database is derived from the public domain, with links to resources provided. The information provided is made available solely for general information purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Click here for full Terms of Use.

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